- Sun Oct 20, 2024 5:19 pm
#77846
I still have my copy of Fritz Spiegl’s wonderful “Keep Taking the Tabloids”, an invaluable guide to the peculiar language used by the red tops and fascist tabloids posing as respectable (Mail, Express). You can currently pick up a pre-loved copy from Amazon for less than three quid.
I’ve fallen to wondering about how tabloid-speak manifests itself in the on-line age in which we find ourselves in the 21st century, with all of the popular tabloids now giving great attention to their online presence.
Reach websites, of course, are fucking awful in terms of both content and usability, but what of the others ? The Mail’s “sidebar of shame” for instance, that does so much to make it the most visited online newspaper site in the world (I think).
One example ? Nobody ever just says anything any more. No, they “open up”, or “break their silence” (what silence?). Over to the teams .
I’ve fallen to wondering about how tabloid-speak manifests itself in the on-line age in which we find ourselves in the 21st century, with all of the popular tabloids now giving great attention to their online presence.
Reach websites, of course, are fucking awful in terms of both content and usability, but what of the others ? The Mail’s “sidebar of shame” for instance, that does so much to make it the most visited online newspaper site in the world (I think).
One example ? Nobody ever just says anything any more. No, they “open up”, or “break their silence” (what silence?). Over to the teams .
Attachments
IMG_0091.jpeg (136.06 KiB) Viewed 2397 times
Samanfur liked this
"The opportunity to serve our country: that is all we ask.” John Smith, May 11, 1994.